First Click -- Maryland

Your daily download of Maryland's top political news and analysis

Thursday, October 22, 2009:

State aborts effort to save money through refinancing
The bad news: The fiscal hits keep coming. Maryland Treasurer Nancy K. Kopp says a spike in interest rates in the last seven days has prompted her to scrap plans to refinance $600 million in municipal bonds - a move projected to save the state tens of millions of dollars, writes Danielle Ulman in the Daily Record. Ulman quotes Kopp saying she's still hopeful the state can save money by refinancing when the time is right. Maryland is one of four states to recently nix refinancing plans.

The good news: Maryland was able to sell $200 million in new bonds on Wednesday at a 20-year low interest rate, writes Ryan Sharrow in the Baltimore Business Journal.

Other Fiscal News: The Maryland Stadium Authority on Wednesday temporarily withdrew a request for the state to help pay for a new scoreboard and millions of dollars in other improvements to Camden Yards, writes Andy Rosen of MarylandRoporter. The authority is expected to reintroduce the request in two weeks.

Obama uses Maryland backdrop to tout small business bailout (AP Photo)
President Barack Obama traveled to a small business in Hyattsville on Wednesday to announce plans to shift federal bailout spending toward small businesses. Gov. Martin O'Malley, a large contingent from the state's congressional delegation and Prince George's leaders were in attendance.

Free speech returns to MoCo, PG parks
The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission has indefinitely suspended a series of rules slammed as unconstitutional by the ACLU, writes The Post's Michael Laris. Maryland Politics Watch first posted the interim rules here. Park police will no longer stop someone for holding a campaign sign without a permit, as happened to a volunteer campaigning with Montgomery GOP candidate Robin Ficker on the Fourth of July. The park rule makers also dropped permit requirements for collecting signatures and conducting interviews.

A proposed West Virginia wind power project will harm a tiny, endangered bat and its developers should be should obtain permits under the Endangered Species Act, lawyers argued in federal court in Greenbelt on Wednesday, writes the AP's Alex Dominguez.